Professor Sabina Siebert

Biography

Sabina currently works as a Professor of Management in the Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow. With her background in linguistics, literature and cultural studies she started her career as a tutor in British culture in the University of Łódź, and a tutor in Slavonic culture at the University of Glasgow. Her interest in social-cultural theory and research into representations of working-class culture brought her closer to the area organisational sociology, which consequently led to a move to Caledonian Business School where she worked in the Department of People Management, and the Department of Cultural Business. In 2010, she moved to the University of Glasgow where she researchs and teaches in the area of change management, organizational behaviour and human resource management.

2014 - Consultants’ experience of the changing nature of work in the NHS in Scotland, the British Medical Association, Scottish Consultants Committee (co-investigator, £49,000)

2010 – ‘Voluntary work experience in the creative and cultural industries’ Business, Management, Accountancy and Finance subject group in HEA (Principal Investigator, £3,000)

2008 – ‘The use of electronic submission and assessment system within a Virtual Learning Environment’, Business, Management, Accountancy and Finance subject group in HEA (Principal Investigator, £3,000)

2007 – ‘Exploring the use of Bachelors degree in relation to work based learning’ conducted for the Quality Assurance Agency Scotland (Co-investigator, £8,000)

Supervision

Potential PhD Supervision Topics

Dr Sabina Siebert is interested in supervising PhD researchers in the area of organizational trust, the workplace learning, change management, trade union studies and management in the creative and cultural industries.

PhD Supervision

James Baird (2016+) PhD: How audit partners make decisions; the impact of new audit methods, the compliance culture and systemic regulations the process of audit decision-making

Robert Millard (2016+) PhD: Value creation and destruction in transatlantic law firm mergers